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Olympics Day 1 by Duncan Holland

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

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Duncan Holland writes;

I watched the first day of the rowing this morning, what a day for the Kiwis!  Seven of the New Zealand crews were on the water today and they brought home five first places and two seconds.  

Qualifying eight boats for this regatta was a great performance, and it looks as if the New Zealanders are out to carry on what they have been doing for the last few years and be one of the top rowing teams in the world.  How do they do it?

I am an outsider these days and have little knowledge of what goes on in the Kiwi camp but I have noticed a fascinating thing; the Kiwi rowers are cheerful!  I have coached in five countries and have either been in the national team or coached athletes in the team in all of them.  In the other four my memories of the team are largely of people bitching and grumbling about other crews or about the management.  

Observing the New Zealanders over the last four years the most obvious difference from the others is that they are basically happy.  They enjoy themselves and seem largely content with their coaches and management.

Most teams these days talk about being athlete centred, the Kiwi rowers seem to have found out how to do it.  I believe this is the secret to their success.

I hope and believe the Kiwis are on their way to a record success these games.  If so then maybe they can lead a movement to put fun back into sport!

Duncan

Nerves.

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Duncan Holland writes;

I promised yesterday to tell you how we got on today in the Cambridge Town Bumps . The answer is; very well.  We managed to get our third bump of the week and stand on the edge of a clean sweep and the right to Blades.


It was an instructive afternoon for me.  Again I found myself having to do what I normally tell others to do.  I have a fixed pre-race routine and it got disrupted yesterday when some guests we were expecting got lost and were late arriving.  This threatened to make me late.  It wasn’t a real threat as we had a Plan B, but I found myself exhibiting classic pre-race nerve symptoms.  I had to use some of the skills I try to teach to athletes and remind myself that there was an alternative, that we had a built in time reserve.  A good reminder that even the most experienced of us need to remember the basics, and that a plan with built in safeguards is worthwhile.

The crew performed well.  We managed to execute the plan we had made, managed to structure our race better, and enjoyed ourselves thoroughly.  Now we have a chance to achieve what would be, for us, a significant step.  Blades would be a good effort; we have to make sure that we don’t slip up at the last hurdle.  Just as a crew that has won a semi-final at a Championship will try to focus on what to do in the final, not on the possibility of winning, we must try to live by the mantra ‘process not outcome’.  If we go out to race thinking of what might be we risk losing.  We must again think of what to do, listen to the cox’n, the coach, and think of what makes the boat fast, not what we want to achieve.

The event is local, the absolute level not great, but the skills we need tonight are the same ones the big boys will need at the Olympics.  And we are having fun, I hope they do too!

Duncan

Just like the real thing.

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Duncan Holland writes;

I wrote yesterday about how I was struck by the similarity between the post-race analyses of our Bumps crew and that of a high-performance outfit.  Last night I realised that there is a further analogy that is of interest, to me anyway!

The Bumps involves racing four times over the space of four days.  Each day the crew starts in a potentially new position based on yesterday’s results, theirs and their competitors.   This has some similarity to a championship regatta such as the Worlds where crews are faced by four rounds.  Where the analogy is interesting is on the mental side, the mental preparation and reaction.  

Before the first day there are hopes of triumph, and fears of the unknown.  Can we win Blades or a medal, are we competitive?  After the first race there are some data, hopes may be alive of a triumph, there may have to be some reassessment, some re-alignment of goals to make them realistic.  After days two and three the process continues, good performances bring added pressure and expectation, a poor one the need to re-assess.  If things go well for three rounds then before the final race there is a crescendo of hope and expectation.

As a case in point; our crew (Champion of the Thames M5)  came into the Bumps with high hopes and some trepidation.  On day one we went out after our best ever training session and rowed poorly to a relatively easy bump .  Afterwards we talked, realised we hadn’t executed the plan and promised each other to do better the next day.  Yesterday we rowed much better, followed the script better, and got a good Bump, well earned by our standards.

Now comes the interesting challenge; today we can sniff a winning week, Blades are a possibility.  We know we have to row as we did yesterday, we need to stay focused in the present, to stay in our own boat, to be patient.  In fact, to execute all the sports psychology clichés that are familiar to us all.  

This is where the analogy bites for me.  I have spent a long time telling people to do these things, now I have to do them myself.  I’ll let you know how we, and I, get on.

Duncan

Bumps are fun!

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Duncan Holland writes:


Cambridge Town Bumps
have started, last night was round one.  There were the usual high profile (relatively) happenings, (Rob Roy lost the Women’s Headship to 99’s ) and there was the usual wealth of excitement.

Those of you who have read my pieces before will know that I am a fan of Bumps.  How else can you get 94 eights onto a tiny stream for meaningful competition in the space of a few hours?  And for that matter what other town has this many people rowing from such a small population?
My crew bumped up, most of the improvement we have made over the last 2 months stuck, and we caught the St. Radegund crew ahead of us.

I was fascinated listening to us afterwards; the general mood was ‘Could do better’. The thinking, the mix of pleasure at the outcome, the overlay of ‘How to do it better’ was just like a high-performance crew. And therein lies one of the joys of social sport. We know we are slow but get a great buzz out of trying to be better.  

High-performance sport is worthwhile, don’t get me wrong, but what we do is worthwhile too, and costs the taxpayer a lot less!


Duncan

Do Mars and Venus Row Differently?

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Of late I have been coaching various crews in Cambridge UK, the Robinson College 1st Women’s boat and some crews from Champion of the Thames, and have been coaching women for the first time for a number of years.  All the crews have been preparing themselves for The Bumps
Apart from being great fun this experience has re-confirmed a belief I formed many years ago.  Men and women are different!  So what?

I often get asked questions along the lines of ‘What differences should there be in the training programme for men and women?’  I don’t think there should be a significant difference.  I believe men and women can, and should, row the same way, train the same way; do the same amount of work.


Where I see the difference is in the attitudes displayed.  These are merely generalisations, but like all good generalisations, have a grain of truth in them.  If a men’s boat isn’t going well the first reaction from most of the crew is ‘The others are messing it up for me’.  Women react with the polar opposite ‘Sorry, I am messing it up for you’.  

The interesting question for me is how I should react, and yes I know my views are filtered through my attitudes and experiences, and are therefore not truly objective, coaching is a subjective business.  

What are your experiences and suggestions?


Duncan

What is a coach?

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

What is a coach?

 

I have just bought a lovely old book from Way’s bookshop in Henley on Thames.  It is Roy Meldrum’s ‘Coach and Eight’, first published in 1932.  Meldrum was a leading coach of the time who was a leader of the orthodox school of rowing who were epitomised by the Lady Margaret BC and in opposition to the Fairbairn types from Jesus College BC.

 

Meldrum starts the book with the following passage;

‘A coach is someone of either sex, usually a man at present, who borrows a bicycle and rides beside a crew.  When there is a gale or a poor choice among bicycles, he sometimes rides behind the crew; and sometimes sees for the first time things he had not suspected.  He can see as much and in greater comfort if he has a bicycle of his own; as much, but perhaps with less comfort if he is honoured with a horse.’


 

There is a lot of wisdom in this short passage. Leaving aside the horse, about which I am not qualified to comment, let us think for a moment about what a coach is.  Like many I started my coaching career when I could no longer row.  Was it not G B Shaw who said ‘He who can does, he who cannot, teaches’?  Relatively few of the top coaches around were top performers themselves.  Is this because the success top performers had has satisfied their thirst?  Is it that the sad people who coach are those who failed to achieve and now eke out a miserable existence warming their egos at the fires of the next generation?  I like to think that coaching and performing are so different that few people have the breadth of personality and diversity of skill to succeed at both.

 

An associated question that is exercising many around the world at this time of year is ‘How to identify a good coach?’  The season has already seen its share of coaches moved on, dropped or not re-employed and the searches for their successors, discreet and otherwise, are starting.  Every year sees a similar merry go round.  The same coaches are shuffled between the same jobs, and off we go again for another season.  It has echoes of the greater idiocies perpetrated by the owners of football clubs.

 

May I suggest to those searching for a coach that they first look at themselves and their own failings before setting out to find a coach whom they can blame when things go wrong next season?

 

To return to the headline; ‘What is a coach?’   Did you hear the one about the rugby club who called guy who ran their practices Bus, because he certainly wasn’t a coach?!

Duncan Holland 

Day 2, ARA Coaching Conference - Chris Shambrook: Intelligence for Coaching

Sunday, January 27th, 2008


Chris Shambrook: Intelligence for Coaching

 Discuss the most rewarding coaching experience you ever had round the table.  What did you feel like?
Emotional intelligence for coaching rowing
First test
-    Write down 4/5 words about the athletes who are easiest to coach
-    Alongside write down 4/5 words about how you feel when coaching them
Chicken or Egg?  What comes first – the great athlete or is it how you are thinking / feeling leading their response to your lead.
Discuss (now do the reverse for negative feelings)
We felt you have to ‘act’ and always be positive, but when you get nothing back from the athletes it is draining emotionally.
There is resource you have available to you influences the performance of the crew.
Performance = potential minus interference which prevents performance
-    Coaching performance
-    Individual athlete performance
-    Crew performance
Quote from Jurgen Grobler “We often ask is it the athlete? Or is it the coach.  Well that is a challenge, a bit motivation for me.”
Chris described this a ‘healthy’ paranoia…..!



Boat speed

-    Physical, technical, biomechanical, tactical options.  If we have exhausted improved boat speed via these means
-    Then focus on EI (Emotional Intelligence) by getting athletes more consistently in tune to how they are thinking and how it makes them feel is there an advantage to be gained here?
-    Will EI unlock more potential with the core elements?
-    Value of explicit EI work versus implicit consideration through good coaching



Stephen Covey mantras

“seek first to understand and then be understood”
-    We need to be world class in our ability to do this.
-    What’s it like to be in the receiver mode when you are asking an athlete, why don’t you understand what I am saying?
“we tend to judge ourselves by our intentions and others by their behaviours”
-    Many athletes seem to have the intention of doing stuff wrong because their behaviour is showing mistakes.  Clearly this isn’t true all the time.
-    Can you be confident that the athletes’ behaviours are matched up with their intentions?
-    Is your communication as positive and helpful as possible and are you receiving back in a positive way and recognise what you get back in order to then be positive back again to the athlete?
-    Both of these result in the asking of different questions and a changing of perspective.
-    Sometimes being autocratic in coaching is exactly the right thing to do

If you don’t keep control of thoughts and emotions at key points in a game / match difficult things can happen – computer rage, players fighting.  A dis-connect between thought and emotion.
Most of the time EI is probably working very well because you don’t see the negative things coming out.
Good examples of many people interacting at the same time and keeping focus e.g. open heart surgery, F1 pit crew (24 people for 10 seconds round a car), rowing coaches monitor many things at one time (water conditions, how others are moving, stopwatch, megaphone, drive a launch – multi tasking).


You’re contagious
Attitudes are contagious – is yours worth catching?  Use this when selecting athletes and how they will perform in the changing room, in training, during a match.  When you spend time with people you tend to share moods – within 2 hours.  Research in work meetings proved this.
People who are more committed to the team are likely to link moods more readily.
Task 2: Think about your club / squad.  Which person is most likely to set the mood? Where does the emotional lead come from?


Coaches tend to set the tone

-    Emotional spread is often done by leaders – because they talk more, but people listen to people with authority and has more chance to influence
-    Leaders tend to comment first on matters and subsequent comments build on that first comment
-    The leader’s interpretation of a situation provides the reference point for the group so appropriate emotional reaction is a function of the message sent out by the leader.
-    Where are the opportunities when you can choose to spread a positive / negative mood?  Team debrief after an outing, before a race briefing


Positive emotions = better performance. 
Feel more relaxed / confident, relaxed.  Increased mental efficiency, flexibility of thought, mopre likely to break a movement pattern if they feel positive.  If not feeling like that they revert to safety their traditional way of moving.
Upbeat moods increase the positive view of others – tends to make better connection for teamwork.
Increased optimism of success leads to increases creativity and decision making and helpfulness within the crew.
The ability of a leader to pitch a group into an enthusiastic, cooperative mood can determine success.
 

4 quadrants of EI
-    Self awareness – this has to be high – your mental and physical state.  What about your personality and how it interacts with other people.  Are you conscious of your fatigue, concentration levels physically as well.  Remember to look after yourself as well as your athletes
-    Self regulation – can I make choices to change me from how I am now to where I need to be.  How good am I to shift a mood or a thought process to a different one?  How good am I to get phycisal rest and recovery?  Coaching sharpness this is really challenging when your body is tired and your brain needs to pick up on this.
-    Awareness of others – pick up on them once you’ve sorted yourself!  How good are you at others’ physical state, mental state.  Vital.
-    Management of others – how good are you at putting things in place that allows them to shift and move to the most appropriate state for functioning now.


Task 3
Think of each EI quadrant as 100% score possibilities.  What is your current profile in each of the 4 segments?  Consider the right side and the left side of the grid.

How am I?

How are they?

How do I need to be

How do they need to be?

You are doing this technically all the time with athletes
technically.  Now add in the EI side to
include emotion and thought.  Will this
help you as a coach?  Making a conscious
choice to bring this into your coaching will that make it more effective.  If you do it implicitly you could probably
improve from unconscious competence to conscious competence.

Ask the question, do I need to change how the athletes are
in order to change what they are doing?

Be alert to what is interfering with the communication
process. May be worth taking off the water for a discussion rather than trying
to solve it during an outing.

Most of sports psychology is about getting athletes to
choose their thoughts and feelings in order to deliver success.  Can you do this systematically (visualisation,
arousal levels, pep talk, pre-race plan) and can you do it consistently?

The challenge

-         
There is the here and now version of the grid.  What’s happening now?

-         
Then what happens in preparation – project ahead
to a situation you are going into.  How
am I typically and how do I need to be in this situation – and for the crew.

-         
Make proactive decisions about how you and they
need to feel and then do everything possible to ensure that you deliver on
those behavioural / attitudinal goals. 
Practise!

-         
Set and evaluation thinking and behavioural
goals


The Self Management Recipe

-    Mood management – how strongly can you rate yourself, recognise and change it or accentuate if required
-    Self-motivation – regular conversations with yourself to keep you motivated, focused. How easy do you find that.  How much time do you invest in this? Regularity?
-    Using intuition – a coaching skill you should pay attention to regularly.  Do you suppress it?
-    Dealing with setbacks – how good is your self-management on this? This is a skill you will be faced with on a regular basis.  If prepared, you can take positive steps on from a setback.  You know how to deal with them.  Visualise the situation.  Sets a good example to athletes
-    Managing energy and peaking for a performance – for yourself.  When is peak moment, how effectively do you have all the resources ready for that moment? When an important week comes up, look at the week prior to ensure you go into the big week as prepared as possible
-    Switching on and off – when you leave the boathouse, can you leave it there and not think about it. 
Identify your strengths and play to them as often as possible.  Practice your key mental skills. 
Concentration - attending to the right thing at the right time.  What are the key things at this time?  Managing energy enables better concentration management.

Management of relationships
-    Motivating others (or not demotivating them) Most people turn up with all the motivation they are going to have and leaders tend to reduce that level of motivation! Can you give a pep talk?
-    Leading others – giving them a view of where you are going, the map of the journey.  What is your style of leading?
-    Coaching others – most of your time is spent doing technique, can you add in other umbrella concepts as well
-    Collaboration – how good are you at this?
-    Confrontation? 
-    Facilitation relationships between others – allowing each athlete to be aware of the strengths of others, how to get the most out of them when in crew boats together,

Getting on the same page… if all this works
Being emotionally intelligent involves
-    Noticing feelings
-    Paying attention to them
-    Recognising their importance
-    Using your thoughts about them to make decisions about how to respond
This applies to your own feelings and those of others.

Crew EI
-    A crew may react differently e.g. stroke may be very self involved and not aware of what’s going on around
-    Bow may be very focused on everyone else but not very focused on themselves
-    2 – may be focused on the thoughts and feelings of the coach rather than themselves
-    3 – may be good at focusing both on themselves and the crew as a whole
-    As a coach you have to consider both the individuals and the whole crew…. what is the style of each athlete…..
-    Athletes who are good at noticing feelings are often also good at kinaesthetic awareness (how their body is moving)

What EI rates – “self”
Definitions  on sheet in pack…. give yourself a score rate 1-10
-    Emotional resilience – maintaining positive
-    Personal power – the degree that you believe you are in charge of and take responsibility for the things in your life rather than seeing yourself as a victim of circumstance
-    Goal directedness – important as a coach.  The degree to which your behaviour is related to your own long term goals.
-    Flexibility – how good are you at being blocked off and coming up with new ways to overcome, flexible thinking
-    Personal openness and connectedness – how readily people see you as approachable and how effective people see you are in terms of making relationships.
-    Invitation to trust – how trustworthy are you. Do you act congruently with your aims and goals.  If you say you will do something do you do it regularly?

What EI rates – “others”
There is a ‘sweet spot’ with just enough and not too much or too little of all of these.
-    Trust – you can be too trusting (mistrustful, carefully trusting, over trusting) do you trust athletes to do things on their own.
-    Balanced outlook (pessimistic, realistically optimistic, over optimistic) when preparing a crew… what would your athletes say about you
-    Emotional expression and control (under controlled, free and in charge, over controlled) is emotion something that happens to you (are you Dr Spock and over controlled)
-    Conflict handling (passive, assertive, aggressive) What is your style?
-    Interdependence (dependent, interdependent, independent) What is the balance of working with others, do you let others work with you?

Specific needs for coaching
Pre race pep talk – how are you typically and how do you need to be to give the best send-off? How are the athletes and how do you need them to be?
Post race debrief after a defeat – how are you typically and how do you need to be?  What is the challenge in an emotional sense for you?
Post race debrief after a surprise victory – to build on this.  Typical reaction versus ideal.

 
Question

How do you stop people talking themselves down?  Come up with two different sets of recipes – how do you become the world’s worst rower and what would you say to yourself in order to become worse each session (rhythm, timing, bladework) Then what would be the world’s most receptive, improving rower.  If I incentivised you enough are you confident you can do all these things to become the worst….?  [they are confident that they can choose behaviours to make a bad outcome].  Then talk about the positive and whether there is any difference between the two.  Commit to doing the change.  Remind them on the water “you are choosing to be rather ineffective right now.  Do you want to carry on making this choice, because I’ll support you fully….”
Working with cricketers – he gets a list of all the negative things they talk to themselves.  Permission to coach them using the same negative phrases while they are facing a batting machine….. this makes them realise that if someone else talks to them in the same way they talk to themselves it isn’t a good thing.